The Origins of April 20th as a Day of Celebrating Cannabis

The biggest celebration day in the cannabis culture is April 20. The April 20 (4/20) celebration originally started in the mid 1970s as the time of day after school, 4:20 pm, for high school students in San Rafael, California to meet to smoke pot. The phrase “I’ll see at you at 4:20” became code for, “I’ll be there to smoke a joint with you after classes are over”.

As these students graduated and moved beyond the parochial boundaries of high school, the use of the term 4:20 showed up discreetly on a few California college campuses, but more noticeably among the ritualistic canon of the ‘Deadhead’ culture – that is, followers of the band The Grateful Dead. These fans made a lifestyle of following the band tour across America (and Europe), consuming LSD and lots of pot before, during and after these often-lengthy concerts, and were the first to incorporate the term ‘4:20’ into every day vernacular.

By the mid-1980’s, an any Dead tour, or Rainbow gathering, you could hear the usually rhetorical question “What time is it?” and the response was, if you were hip, “Four twenty!”, no matter what time it was according to Greenwich Mean Time (the official clock time). Then a joint would be produced and smoked. At the actual 4:20pm, a cry went out, “Four-twennnttttttyyyyyy!”, as it does now a million times every day upon every hour as 4:20pm occurs in each consecutive time zone across the earth. It’s no exaggeration to say that a cry of “Four-Twenty!” is exhorted in 2013 in every hamlet, village, town, city, campus, on the planet every day at the magical time of twenty-after-four in the afternoon.

But the advent of worldwide celebrations taking up an entire day on April 20 is a bit more recent in our cultural history.

On July 7, 1994, I opened the HEMP BC store at 324 West Hastings. This was a historic development, as the Canadian government had banned the distribution of all marijuana books, magazines, literature, bongs, pipes and all aspects of the cannabis culture in 1987 – ending the distribution of High Times in Canada, closing all pipe and bong and “head” shops in all of Canada, and even banning the distribution of Jack Herer’s vital ground-breaking work “The Emperor Wears No Clothes”.

Underneath the big HEMP BC sign at 324 West Hastings was the slogan “The Marijuana & Hemp Center For Greater Vancouver”. My first employees were Ian Hunter, a local activist, and two ‘Deadheads’ named Danna Rozek and Cindy Lassu. All of our behavior in those days was considered revolutionary. Everything we sold was illegal, but we proudly said “All of these pipes are for smoking marijuana. We do not endorse tobacco use.” We smuggled High Times magazine into Canada and sold the current and numerous back issues, all illegal. We flaunted smoking marijuana from opening at 10:00am to closing at 9:0opm every day in the store. We invited our customers to partake with us.

We were an instant sensation. We started selling seeds three months later, and we began producing the “Marijuana & Hemp Newsletter” magazine immediately, which eventually became Cannabis Culture. In issue #3 we produced the most popular article ever to be printed in all of the 79 issues of that magazine (five as Marijuana & Hemp Newsletter, twelve as Cannabis Canada, 62 as Cannabis Culture, all from 1994-2009), “How to Open Your Own Hemp Store – And Start a Revolution in your Community!” in the summer of 1995 (see the updated version from 2006 here and see the original article here). Within a year of that article, over 30 “hemp stores” were opened across Canada, some remain in business to this day, such as Toronto Hemp Company, and Hemp Ware in St. John’s.

Within days of opening, I became aware of a peculiar daily phenomenon I had never experienced as a pot smoker in my hometown London, Ontario. From December 21, 1980, the day I first smoked pot, to July 2, 1992, when I moved to Asia to live for 20 months, I had never heard anyone yell out “Four Twenty”.

I arrived in Vancouver on March 1, 1994, completely new to the west coast and Vancouver, and in May I met Ian Hunter. On a few occasions I had heard him say, “It’s 4:20, everyone,” to any nearby, and he’d light up a joint. I thought, “what strange creatures these west-coasters be!” Ian was a known hempster hipster in Vancouver. Later he would open the still-operating Sacred Herb in January, 1995. Ian died in a nighttime boating accident in 1999 after smoking DMT by himself in a small boat, falling out of the easily-rocked vessel, and drowning. Ian died way too young, but I was told he washed upon the shore with a beatific smile upon his face.

Ian explained the 4:20 daily ritual to me, but I didn’t think much of it at first. However, when I hired the dread-Deadheaded Danna Rozek to be the store manager in August 1994, she hired fellow Deadhead Cindy Lassu, and with Ian they became the nucleus of the HEMP BC store staff. We smoked pot in the store non-stop. At 4:20, all three would yell, “Four-twenty, smoke ’em if you got ’em!” – which seemed redundant to me, since we were always smoking anyway, but it became a fun loud exclamation every day. I got used to that afternoon celebration, and I noticed that most customers to our store were unfamiliar with it, but it quickly became popular in our limited circle of customers and within the small but growing culture we were part of.

One day in early March 1995, Danna and Cindy came to me at my desk at HEMP BC, and we had this exchange I remember vividly. Danna said, “Marc, we’d like to have a ‘Four-Twenty’ celebration on April 20. We’d like your permission and approval to put on a Four-Twenty concert and rally and fun time in Victory Square next door.”

Victory Square – which we were calling “Hemp-For-Victory Square” (named after the re-discovered 1942 US Department of Agriculture film “Hemp for Victory” that Jack Herer had found after years of the US government denying its existence), and at that time a staple in the nascent hemp and legalization movement – was a park fifty feet down the street from HEMP BC, at the southwest corner of Cambie Street and West Hastings.

“What do you mean? A rally at 4:20 that day, on April 20?” I asked in clarification.

“No, an all-day celebration of Four-Twenty, on Four-Twenty, because April 20 is like, Four-Twenty, get it?” Danna further explained, though I had ‘gotten’ it.

“You mean, hold a celebration, a party, rally, good time in the park, all day on April 20?!” I was aghast. “Could we get away with that?”

“Yeah, that’s exactly what we mean,” said Danna, representing her and Cindy. “I’m sure we could get away with it. We could try anyway. I’m sure it’ll work.”

As I come from an Ayn Rand capitalist-hardwork-ethos background (since October 1979), this idea that we’d enshrine a whole day of celebrating cannabis by smoking pot for several hours in a public square seemed outrageous, outlandish, and playing into the slacker-stoner stereotype. “No, we can’t do that.” I said.

“Yes, we could!” Danna and Cindy immediately responded with a very enthusiastic emphasis.

“No, I can’t condone that.” I reiterated.

Thirty minutes later the two came back to my desk as I was working. “Even if you don’t approve, can we go ahead and do it anyway?” they implored.

I had always believed in taking initiative, and admired self-starters. I considered them for a few moments, and said, “Yes.”

They both jumped up and down and embraced each other and cried “Yay!!!”, and then they immediately asked, “If we organize it, will you help?”

“What does that mean?” I asked.

“Well, we drew up a budget and we’ll need $200, and electrical cables from the store here to the square to provide power for the amplification system, and we’ll need to work at the park most of the day, so will you help in those things and whatever else might come up?”

I remember how these two very hippie-like young women were making me part of their 4/20 conspiracy. I used to sit at my desk, puffing pot, wearing white business shirts with a tie and vest, akin to an older Alex Keaton (played by Michael J. Fox) from Family Ties, with John Lennon glasses at the time.

“Yes. Put your plan together. Tell the rest of the staff,” (by then 8 people) “and we’ll make sure it happens.” Again, Danna Rozek and Cindy jumped up and down embraced and cheered.

So April 20, 1995 came around. It was a beautiful sunny day. Thick cables ran from every electrical outlet at HEMP BC out the front door and east on Hastings for about 70 feet (and across cobble-stoned Hamilton Street) into Victory Square park, where a stage was erected, musicians retained, speakers invited, even some vending booths set up. A banner over the stage welcomed the people “4/20 Day in Vancouver”.

The proceedings started at noon with about 50 people watching and tentatively smoking. By 2:00pm there were 150 there, many now sitting on blankets and sheets on the ground, more people comfortably ensconced for the afternoon, and a subtle waft of cannabis floating in the air. So far, no police were visible, and a certain comfort set it. At the peak at about 4:00pm, there were about 250 curious people watching the musical entertainers and a different speaker exhorting the benefits of cannabis every 15 to 30 minutes. It went to 7:00pm when the daylight faded, and at no point did any police come by, even though Victory Square park is at a main intersection, the very busy Cambie and Hastings streets. The day was a total success. No one was arrested, everyone had fun – a tradition in Vancouver had begun.

One of the speakers at this first public April 20 gathering was then-editor of Cannabis Culture (then Cannabis Canada) magazine, Dana Larsen, who has continued to be a major activist in Canada. He is currently coordinating the campaign www.SensibleBC.ca, which seeks to have a referendum placed before the voters of British Columbia to decriminalize marijuana possession. I was also one of the original speakers, along with Ian Hunter, Rev. Leroy Campbell, and Danna Rozek.

The following year, in 1996, the Vancouver 4/20 was again organized by HEMP BC staff and I at Victory Square, and the park was largely occupied to capacity with over 500 people there at its peak, with a much greater concentration of cannabis smoking going on. In 1997, we decided to move the celebration to the plaza at the Vancouver Art Gallery in downtown Vancouver’s business and shopping district, where it has continued to expand its size, attendance and smoking hours each year.

In 1997, a thousand people attended, and it remaining about 1,000-1,500 people at its peak at 4:20 each year until about 2004, when it hit 3,000. Then it hit 5,000 people in 2005, and it was a noticeable increase. Traffic on the main corridor West Georgia Street was blockaded by police. YouTube’s introduction and the ability to share videos online popularized the April 20 smokeout rally idea on the internet, which began to inspire other cities around the world to organize their own April 20 events.

By 2008, about 8,000 people crowded the plaza by 4:20, and Howe Street and Georgia Street were sealed off by the City. In 2010, it is possible 10,000 people attended at the peak. People are present from sunrise to after sunset. And on April 20 last year, there were 20,000 people packed onto and around the Vancouver Art Gallery grounds at 4:20pm.

An open farmer’s market has been very much a part of the celebration since 2004, and now it is the most remarkable phenomenon you can see anywhere, with dozens of cannabis vendors selling – showcasing! – cannabis wares of every sort. The smoking starts now at about 8:00am and continues to about 8:00pm. After 4:00, when the activist community organizers on the now-huge stage coordinate the joint toss and count down to 4:20 pm, the resulting cloud from 20,000+ people all smoking joints and bongs simultaneously and then exhaling is nothing short of awe-inspiring. See these videos from previous years to see what I mean, at www.420Vancouver.com.

The tradition that started in Vancouver has, through YouTube and the internet, spread to every place on earth where there are pot smokers, and we are everywhere! This year’s 4/20 promises to be easily the largest attended worldwide cannabis celebration in the history of mankind, especially as it falls on a Saturday. Most major cities in Canada have a 4/20 in a public square or major park this year (see the list and add your town at www.420rally.ca). Some will be huge, like Toronto and Vancouver, with stages, scheduled entertainment, vendors, and pot smoking rampant in the entire daylight hours.

This year, Canadian cannabis activist and lottery-winner Bob Erb contributed upwards of $100,000 to assist the organizers across Canada in putting together the most awesome national 4/20 celebration ever mounted. So there are sophisticated 4/20 celebrations in every province and territory in Canada this year, even in Yellowknife in the North West Territory! Ontario has major 4/20 celebrations in London, Windsor, Hamilton, Ottawa, Sudbury, and Toronto. See more information at www.420rally.ca.

April 20 celebrations will go on in major cities in Australia, through all the United States, and in parts of Europe and South America. Many universities and colleges in the world have a 4/20 celebration somewhere on campus that day. The internet has helped the phenomenon of 4/20 become an inspiration to every pot smoker, an opportunity to celebrate our culture.

Following on the 4/20 celebrations, another worldwide event that I sponsored in its infancy from 1998 to 2005, with about $30,000 per year in contributions, was the Global Marijuana March, originally called the Million Man Marijuana March (or Million Marijuana March). The GMM was started by Dana Beal, an activist from New York City whose activities hailed as far back as the early 1970’s in the Abbie Hoffman Yippies (Youth International Party). Dana Beal and I both did pioneering work in ibogaine drug addiction rehabilitation work, and Dana established the Global Marijuana March in 1997 and brought me (and High Times Magazine) on board in 1998 to promote it.

The Global Marijuana March has less pot, and more protest and politics. In the United States, 750,000 people are convicted each year for marijuana offenses, and over 22 million Americans alive today have criminal records for marijuana convictions going as far back as 1966. Statistically, 26 million Americans have received criminal records for marijuana convictions since 1966, but four million of those convicted are no longer living.

More political in orientation than the April 20 4/20 celebrations, the Global Marijuana March is a protest march through major cities from a point A to point B. In Canada, the largest of these has been the GMM in Toronto, with over 30,000 participating in recent years. This year, in most places in North America, the GMM is on Saturday May 4, as it is in Vancouver this year. The City of Toronto has this year, for the first time, given permits to both the April 20 gathering at Yonge Street and Dundas Square, and the Toronto Freedom Festival/Global Marijuana March – though this year, the GMM got its approval for Saturday, May 11. Find more information at www.GlobalMarijuanaMarch.ca and www.TorontoFreedomFestival.com

Both events are important in consolidating our presence as a relevant cultural and political force. April 20 is such an eye-opening cultural phenomena throughout the world that all major international, national, regional and local media now cover every aspect of the 4/20 tradition.

From 1995 to 2013, in the space of 18 years (running parallel to the introduction of the “World Wide Web” in September 1994), the 4/20 phenomena has grown exponentially so that as many as ten million people will gather in public places throughout the world to celebrate cannabis by smoking marijuana, despite the prohibition in every jurisdiction on the planet (except the states of Washington and Colorado in the USA). It is expected over 200,000 Canadian cannabis consumers will participate this year, and between one million to two million Americans take part.

To find out where the 4/20 celebrations and Global Marijuana Marches are happening nearest you, go to the following links:

About Author

Marc Emery is a Canadian cannabis activist, entrepreneur, and politician. Known to his fans as the Prince of Pot, Emery has been a notable advocate of international cannabis policy reform for decades. Marc is the founding publisher of Cannabis Culture and Pot TV.

Comments

11 Comments

We are the Oldest and finest call girls service providers in Delhi, We give a choice of beautiful call girls and models for perceptive gentlemen living, functioning and traveling all the way through Delhi, Our collection of beautiful Indian Female includes college girls, young working girls, call center girls, hot models, and some wannabe celebrities and actress. http://on.natgeo.com/12a9N7o You can book our call girls for dinner dates disco parties and more.

Anonymous on
May 7, 2013 1:06 pm

Sania Roy independent Delhi Girls. Delhi girls services brings Delhi Model who are perfect in the art of seduction, pleasure and ecstasy, Delhi is the city of movers and shakers and sometime this fast paced life can turn up to be quite exhausting and boring. If the monotonous drone of your life is draining http://www.saniaroy.com/ you then it is time you relax yourself in the most fabulous way possible.

Anonymous on
May 7, 2013 1:03 pm

My name is Anu Mehta
The site was very beautiful!
just search at delhi call girls

i put my outdoor plantz outside on 4-20
has always been the norm for me latitude

Anonymous on
April 7, 2013 8:15 am

Marc is a great writer and has done so much for the marijuana movement. But i have to disagree with his 420 origins story. It actually came about because an ounce of Colombian used to be $20. So the dealer would show you the ounce, and you’d say “For $20?” that’s where it came from, according to people who were on window pane and orange sunshine from the time they were 12 until they were 21. praise allah.

Anonymous on
April 6, 2013 2:34 pm

The work day should be from 7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. so we can be home by 4:20. A worthy cause for mankind.

Anonymous on
April 5, 2013 10:14 pm

Anonymous, where did you get THAT info. anyways? Sounds pretty lame and unlikely, unless you used to be a pig in LV 4o yrs. ago! Maybe so, I don’t know! Perhaps your story is also a myth.

Most likely.

Anonymous on
April 3, 2013 4:47 am

420 is the police hundred code in Las Vegas county for homicide. When shipments headed east were intercepted, the code 420 would be used to designate if it was high quality (“the kills”) or not. It has nothing to do with the high school kids originally reported by High Times. Why people keep perpetuating that myth is the same reason why prohibitionists were able to make cannabis illegal in the first place.

PIG 1: We scored some grouper.

PIG 2: WHAT TIME IS IT??? FOUR-TWENTY??? (Hopeful to make some money reselling it on the black market through confidential informants.)

PIG 1: Nahhh, just Mexi …

PIG 2: Well fuck. At least you get the bust. Let’s pretend the quality is high for the purposes of street value.

REMEMBER % 420 (homicide) = THE KILLS

The use of 4:20 as a time was in response to the WHAT TIME IS IT? That was a popular colloquial expression years ago.